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Notes on Apple's Nano Texture (2025)

2024 Nano Texture Macbook Pro on the left; 2021 Glossy Macbook Pro on the right

TLDR: the Nano Texture performs wonderfully anywhere where light used to be a factor and used to force me to shade my screen or avoid the place entirely.

Big thanks to Julie Kruger for the comparison photos and CJ for draft feedback.

sitting outside at North Boulder Park

A few months after I got the Daylight Computer (read my thoughts here), two friends sent me this post comparing the old Macbook Pro displays to the new Nano Texture glass ones. That post convinced me to upgrade my computer in short order, to the dismay of my wallet.

In the four months I’ve had it I’ve told at least a dozen people about it, and I’m gonna keep telling people. Being able to take my entire computing environment to places without being worried about glare has expanded the range of environments I can create in. It means I get to be in environments that are more interesting, fun, and in tune with my body.

What follows are some thoughts about how this display has fit into my day to day life in the couple of months I’ve had it.

Typical matt displays have a coating added to their surface that scatters light. However, these coatings lower contrast while producing unwanted haze and sparkle. Etched into the glass at the nanometre level, the nano-texture scatters light to further minimise glare — for outstanding image quality even in challenging lighting conditions.

https://www.apple.com/uk/shop/buy-mac/apple-studio-display/nano-texture-glass-tilt-adjustable-stand

Basically, it’s a coating physically etched into the screen that reflects light differently from the glossy finish of the traditional screen.

Cursor on the 2021 MBP (Glossy) on the left; 2024 MBP (Nano Texture) on the right

First off, this isn’t apples to oranges - these are different technologies that in my mind, serve a different purpose. The Daylight Computer is an Android tablet, the Macbook Pro is a full MacOS laptop.

The transflective LCD in the Daylight Computer is grayscale but it needs no light to function. It has a backlight, but where it does really well is in direct sunlight with the backlight turned off. When outside in direct sunlight, toggling the Daylight’s backlight on and off doesn’t make a difference because it works fundamentally different from a laptop screen.

2021 MBP (glossy); 2024 MBP (Nano Texture); Daylight Computer (transflective)

On the Daylight computer:

2024 MBP on left; 2021 MBP on right. Dark mode is less ideal on both.

The Nano Texture MacBook Pro is still ultimately a traditional LCD screen. This means the only way to see the screen is if the backlight is powered on: having the backlight off in direct sunlights results in a black screen. Also, it’s worth noting:

Both however are an incredible upgrade over outdoor computing options from just 1 year ago. I believe these are both massive steps in terms of ergonomics and freedom to be in more places as we compute.

If you get annoyed by the glare of your screen and don’t mind a bit of extra mental bandwidth to keep your screen clean, I would highly recommend considering a Nano Texture display upgrade on your next laptop purchase. If you have a chaotic environment and can’t be bothered to keep your screen clean, or you aren’t bothered much by glare or reflections in the environments you work in, then the Nano Texture is probably not for you.